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Contributions to Canadian Political Science Since the Second World War*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 November 2014

Donald V. Smiley*
Affiliation:
University of British Columbia
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Extract

Although most of this essay relates to the work of political scientists, some of it deals with the writings of others who have contributed to our understanding of the government and politics of Canada. It would be a perverse and superficial student of our political institutions indeed who confined himself to the scholarship of political scientists without familiarizing himself at least in a general way with the writings, for example, of historians Ramsay Cook and W. L. Morton, sociologists S. D. Clark and John Porter, economists John Dales and Harry Johnson, legal scholars Edward McWhinney and Frank Scott, and, outside the bounds of Academia proper, journalists Peter Newman and Claude Ryan, and practising public administrators A. W. Johnson and Herbert Balls.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Canadian Political Science Association 1967

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Footnotes

*

An earlier version of this essay was read to a joint meeting of the Canadian Political Science Association and the Canadian Economics Association in Ottawa in June 1967.

References

1 Particularly W. A. Mackintosh, The Economic Background of Dominion-Provincial Relations, J. A. Carry Difficulties of Divided Jurisdiction, and Donald Creighton, British North America at Confederation.

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17 “A Study of One Constituency in the Canadian Federal Election of 1957,” ibid., XXIV, no. 2 (May 1958), 230–40.

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52 The Unreformed Senate of Canada (Rev. ed.), (Toronto, 1963).Google Scholar

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65 (Toronto, 1966).